Living the Great Recognition: Finding Freedom and Bliss within the Fullness of Love | ChatGTP4o

Table of Contents

  • Two quotes from Finding Radical Wholeness: The Integral Path to Unity, Growth, and Delight by Ken Wilber, that served as the seeds for this inquiry with ChatGPT4o.
  • Is this related to wu-weu and surrender?
  • Are there any similar concepts in other spiritual traditions?
  • Can you elaborate with examples from various Indigenous cultures?
  • Are there any modern or post modern reformulations of this Great Recognition?
  • How can the Great Recognition be the pattern that connects, the difference that makes the difference, to be the change we want to see in the world in order to create that most beautiful world our hearts know is possible, Full of Freedom, Bliss and Love?
  • * One quote from Finding Radical Wholeness: The Integral Path to Unity, Growth, and Delight by Ken Wilber, that re-cognize the “utter Simplicity” of the Great Recognition.
  • Can you give several suggestions for a blog article title recognizing the Great Recognition?
  • Can you compose a poem recognizing the Great Recognition?
  • Can you compose a parable recognizing the Great Recognition?
  • Can you create a re-cognized vibrant image recognizing the Great Recognition?

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Laotzu’s Tao and Wu Wei, by Dwight Goddard and Henri Borel, [1919]

The classic of the Way and of High Virtue is the Tao Teh Ching. Its author is generally held as a contemporary of Confucius, Lao Tzu, or Laozi. The exact date of the book’s origin is disputed. The book is divided into two parts, the Upper Part and the Lower Part. The Upper Part consists of chapters 1-37, and each chapter begins with the word “Tao,” or the Way. The Lower Part consists of chapters 38-81, and each chapter begins with the words “Shang Teh,” or High Virtue. This 1919 edition names the Lower Part as the Wu Wei, or translated variously as “not doing,” “non-ado,” or “non-assertion.” This edition also contains a history of the book and its author, Lao Tzu, along with a discussion of the Wu Wei. Lao Tzu’s classic has been cherished as suggestions, rather than commandments, for finding one’s path to beauty, goodness, and quality of life through a non-assertive understanding of the Way. (Summary by Melanie McCalmont)

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